NEW YORK — Commodity prices recovered some of last week’s losses Monday, helping to lift the stocks of energy and materials companies. The broader market also rose despite new worries about Greece’s debt problems.
Oil prices once again moved above $100 a barrel and pushed energy stocks higher. Marathon Oil Corp. rose 5.3 percent. Baker Hughes Inc., which helps companies drill for oil and gas, gained 3.4 percent. Energy companies within the S&P 500 rose nearly 2 percent, the most among the 10 industries in the index.
The S&P 500 added 6.09 points, 0.5 percent, to close at 1,346.29. The Dow Jones industrial average gained 45.94 points, 0.5 percent, to 12,684.68. The Nasdaq composite index rose 15.69 points, 0.6 percent, to 2,843.25.
The rise in commodity prices helped other industries as well. Producers of metals and other materials rose 1.5 percent, second among the S&P 500 groups, thanks to a 5 percent increase in silver prices and a 3 percent increase in corn. Metals and other commodities suffered steep losses last week, when silver tumbled 27 percent and oil sank 15 percent because of fears of weaker global demand and higher margin requirements that were meant to lower the influence of speculators whose strategy of buying on margin is considered a reason why commodities have risen so steeply over the last year.
Financial stocks were the only industry group to decline. Citigroup Inc. fell 2.7 percent on its first day of trading after completing a 1-for-10 reverse split that drastically increased its share price by lowering the number of available shares.
It is now trading in the $40 range for the first time since 2007. Companies often turn to reverse splits to raise their share prices as a way to attract institutional investors who may be prohibited from buying into companies with share prices in the single digits.



